A living conversation from 1915. Questions that still provoke debate. Notes and queries: A Medium of Intercommunication for Literary Men, General Readers, etc., Eleventh Series (Volume XI) is presented here as a focused literary periodical anthology that captures the brisk, inquisitive exchanges of its time. The volume brings together correspondence and queries alongside short notes and responses, preserving the small acts of attribution, textual correction and bibliographical sleuthing that powered English literary history. Far from dry antiquarianism, these pages reveal the rhythms of early 20th century literature - the quick sparks, the referral notes, the debates that edged modern taste. Published during the upheaval of 1915, the journal shows how print networks continued to function even in a troubled year. Casual readers will find lively, human conversation; researchers and librarians will value it as a resource for researchers and an academic reference collection for seminar work, textual studies and provenance research. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. As a historical literary journal it stands as an essential record of literary discussions 1915 and a useful complement to holdings of edwardian era literature and works sought by victorian literature enthusiasts. Collectors of classic literary compendium volumes and fans of the british literary magazine tradition will value its authenticity; academics will treat it as primary-source material that helps map networks of citation and dispute. Librarians, book historians and anyone interested in the history of reading will find it a practical tool for tracing how ideas circulated in print. In short, this restored issue offers both immediate reading pleasure and durable scholarly value - a compact, readable window into the print culture that shaped modern British letters.